When Katy and I were married, this was the song playing during our first dance together...
It is true, isn't it? Love is all you need.
And also, sometimes, it's no where near enough.
There will be more to write and share because this blog is really for our sons, and when they grow up, they deserve to know a bit more about the "say what now?" that we have set in motion. But tonight, it seems important to come clean on the Gin Soaked Olive...
Most of the last year has been a slow, heartbreaking dance of negotiation and decision (Katy's and my relationship hanging in the balance). As marriage equality, literally swept the country; as DOMA was overturned; as state after state leveled the legal playing field, it became more and more clear that our marriage was coming to an end. This Thanksgiving weekend brought to fruition the culmination of hundreds of hours of discussion and debate, and a physical split that has followed an emotional separation, a transfer of finances and home ownership, a filing for divorce.
In case I'm being too vague. We regret to inform our readers that, Katy and I have split up. Though we will always be a family, she has moved out of our home into a house she has purchased nearby, and we will share custody of Jake and Milo.
It is sad and difficult to explain. We have been and will continue to be as amicable as possible. We will always prioritize the health and happiness of our sons.
And I will attempt to stop writing on these pages using so much "we" and shift to the more appropriate, first person singular voice.
This is a "relationship blog", a "parenting blog"... A "2 mommy family" blog. These are some of our stories. We invite you to come laugh, smile, and enjoy the insanity!
Showing posts with label Family History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family History. Show all posts
Sunday, December 01, 2013
Friday, June 28, 2013
Eulogy for Gramma Bella
When I went to write this, I looked for a few quotes about grandmothers… The first two I found were:
“Grandmas never run out of cookies or hugs” and the
next:
“A grandmother is a little bit parent, a little bit teacher,
and a little bit best friend.”
Done. My
work was done.
These so perfectly fit our Grandma Bella, that it made me feel
a little deflated- those are so generic- anyone could look them up on the
internet... and OUR gram was so special…
You probably read in the paper that my grandmother had 21
Grandchildren, 22 Great grand children, and 1 great-great grand daughter. It is remarkable to note that FIFTEEN
BABIES: 1 grandson (Alex), 13 great-grand kids, and baby Mackenzie (The
great-great-grand) were born in the last 9 years since our grandpa died.
Gram experienced a lot of grief after Grandpa died, but
looking back, these years were teeming with babies-
and she LOVED that.
But of course if you knew her, you know she didn’t have just
44 grandchildren. Our spouses, our
inlaws, our cousins on the other sides of our families, any one we brought to
her house, anyone who was our friend… she counted all of them too… that’s
literally hundreds (possibly thousands of people that knew her as
Grandma Gaetano or Grandma Bella) and she welcomed and
treated everyone one of us with love and respect.
I had the idea that I might get up here and mention some of
the most important things that Gram taught us.
THAT is a completely overwhelming prospect.
I mostly wanted to represent the grandkids in taking an
opportunity to publicly thank her for all that she did for us. I think we all did our best to tell her
this every chance we got- to get as many hugs from her as we could…
What is hard to put into words (in the face of losing her)
is that we are losing a relationship that was above all else uncomplicated.
To be Bella Gaetano’s grandchild was to be loved and
appreciated.
Period.
She loved us without exception and without expectation.
She wanted to know us, and see us, and be seen by us.
She met us where we were and asked nothing more of us than
what we could (or were willing) to give.
She bragged about us.
She laughed with us.
She didn’t compare to us each other.
She just enjoyed us.
For many of us, she was the first person we brought our
grievances and heartbreaks to: When our parents took our favorite toys away or
bestowed some insult or punishment, she brought out the cookies and the hugs-
sometimes tough love, too- but usually not.
When we started showing up at her door with our tattoos and
our more legitimate heartbreaks, scholastic and relationship failures, and
other mistakes and adult struggles…
She behaved as a friend.
She treaded lightly.
She listened more than she preached.
She offered compassion and reassurance…
She reminded us that life was hard, but it was long.
Without minimizing our pain, she asked us to see hard times
as necessary and temporary.
She worried
about us when we were hurting…
She locked her blue eyes on us- daring us to see what she
saw: that no matter what we did or what
we didn’t do we were enough, always worthy of love.
She mostly did this without words…
Truthfully, a LOT of the time she did it with FOOD. (She
could heal a heart with a little plate of parmesan cheese and sautéed zucchini,
a plate of food that your parents wouldn’t have been able to get you to eat if
all of your lives depended on it.)
She might also cheer us up or distract us with a funny story,
or a ride on the golf cart,
or invitation to walk with her or to help her clean up her
yard.
Gram was such a good role model.
She had LOTS of friends. Because she was so generous and so eager to help a neighbor,
she collected people and racked up loyalty the way some folks rack up
debt. And her friendships were long
lasting and withstood the tests of time, because she knew that giving to others
did not subtract from, but only added to what was hers…
She liked to keep busy and visit with people. She was quick
to laugh and forgive small grievances.
And mostly her friendships were strong because she was a good judge of character but never a harsh judge of people.
She taught me that a life well-lived usually means losing
labels like “us” and “them”. And
accepting and finding things to appreciate about everyone that wanders into your
life. She was eager to meet new
people. She enjoyed watching people do things they enjoyed, even if it was
something she would never be interested in doing. She gave everyone the benefit of the doubt. She sometimes suffered fools
GLADLY. She expressed and
experienced gratitude.
Gramma knew her worth and stood her ground- with her
husbands, in her business dealings- but she was not immovable. She was always willing to show
vulnerability. She would put
herself out there even if it meant sometimes getting her feelings hurt.
She didn’t stifle laughter.
She didn’t stifle tears.
She was present.
She was participatory.
She never shied away from having her picture taken.
She made her mark on people- on purpose-
not because of what they might do
for her but for what she might do for them.
In the last 2 weeks of her life, my gram attended 2
weddings. The one I was lucky to
be with her at, she would have stayed all night.
This was not a woman who prioritized sleep over living.
Who looked for rest
over dancing or watching others dance.
Who couldn’t keep up with the kids.
Who would leave a lobster uneaten. (If you know her, you know she was no joke with a lobster).
Katy and I apologized to her that we were interested in
leaving before the dancing was actually over (we were her ride back to the
hotel) and in her usual form, she said something like,
“Yes, you two work so hard, you’re probably exhausted.”
(She wasn’t even rolling her eyes at us when she said it).
My sister and I were talking about our sadness and we know
that there has never been a moment of our lives (because we were her
grandchildren) when we didn’t know that this day would come.
But this is the other side of being loved so completely.
This is the bittersweet nature of having been so perfectly
nurtured.
These are the tears that are shed for you when you
live in such a way that hundreds of
people know they have lost one of their best
friends.
We celebrate these tears, because they are from and for you,
Grandma.
And the most important thing is –
We will try to take care of each other- using you as a role
model.
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Tuesday, November 27, 2012
First wake
My dad's Uncle George died the day before Thanksgiving (last week). As I prepared to go to the wake on Sunday, Jake asked where I was going.
Me: Papa's uncle died and TT and I are going with Gram'ma Bella to the wake.
Jake: What's a wake?
Me: Well, when someone dies, there is usually a wake and a funeral... Or some kind of ceremony where you can go say goodbye, and go hug the family and tell them that you are sorry about losing the person they loved.
Jake: Who did they lose?
Me: Well, Papa's uncle George died. So Papa's cousins lost their dad, and Papa's aunt lost her husband. When someone dies, we say we "lost" them.
Jake: Oh.
I absentmindedly asked Jake if he wanted to go. It wasn't an accident exactly. He seemed interested and there is something I want to try to teach these boys early on about life being special and about death being a part of life. And about what it means to belong to a clan of people- that you have respect and are generous with your time, and sometimes you stop what you are doing to show up and bare witness at these events.
Jake: Maybe... I have to think about it.
Me: okay (In my head: "ut oh")
(I never thought he'd agree...
After a few minutes, I thought of a way to deter my 'soft pants' loving boy...)
Me: You know, if you go, you have to put some dress clothes on.
Jake: What do you mean?
Me: I mean, I am going to put work clothes on and you will have to dress up.
J: Like, in what?
Me: Like a sweater, or a shirt and tie, and church pants and shoes.
J: What sweater?
Me: I don't know... like the new one that TT bought you...
(After a few more minutes...)
Jake: I'll wear a tie.
Me: Oh... Okay. (pause) So, we should talk about what it will be like... At a wake, there is usually a box called a coffin that the person who has died will be laying in. And there will be flowers and pictures and his family will be there and we will go through and hug all of his family- Papa's aunts and uncles and cousins.
Jake: Okay.
Me: And at some wakes the coffin is closed and you can't see the person inside but sometimes the coffin is open and you will see the person.
Jake: LIKE A SKELETON?!?
Me: Oh, no... He will look like he's sleeping. He will have his clothes on and of course all his hair and his skin... Maybe his eyeglasses...
Jake: (interrupting) HE HAS EYEGLASSES?!? (The idea that he might see eye glasses seemed as shocking to him as the idea that me might see a skeleton.)
Me: (giggling) I don't know... maybe he does or maybe he doesn't... The coffin might be closed, but it might be open. And he will look like he is sleeping, but he won't be sleeping because he isn't alive anymore; remember how we talked about what happens when a person dies?
Jake: Yes.
Me: Their heart doesn't beat anymore, and they don't breathe, and their body is still there, but their spirit isn't inside their body... ?
Jake: Yes.
Me: Do you still want to go?
Jake: Yeah, but I want to wear the red tie...
Katy likes to tell people that before she met me, she had never been to a wake or funeral. And now she never stops going to them. She is gracious about this and says that if it weren't for me, she would have had no idea how to conduct herself at her grandmother's funeral. I almost skipped Uncle George's wake, but it was at her "it's the right thing to do" urging that I was getting dressed to go. As a former ICU nurse, I'm more confortable than the average bear with corpses. I sometimes have to stop and remind myself that these things can upset "lay people". There are some funerals that children should NOT attend. Very tragic, unexpected deaths... funerals where the adults are generally falling apart and so grief stricken that they are not able to look out for the emotional well being of kids in the room...
When our friend Liz's husband died leaving her widowed with 4 children (3 of the 4 were grade school age and younger), of all of the things she did that impressed me, none impressed me more than her plan for the kids. After a brief appearance at the wake, she had them brought back to the house where Katy and I played with them and fed them dinner and got them to bed. Of course they had to go to their dad's wake, but the emotions were too intense and the line at the funeral home too long to subject them to the entire event.
When my friend John died, I have this stark memory of his nieces a few feet from the coffin only 6 or 7 or 8 years old and my brain was forming the judgemental thought, "What are these parents doing letting their kids just hang around here near the casket all night?!?" when their kiddie conversation came into auditory focus:
Munchkin 1: Do you know why he doesn't look like himself?
Munchkin 2: No? Do you?
Munchkin 1: I think it's because his soul has left his body
Munchkin 2: Yeah, so it isn't really him anymore... just his body.
I had the urge to stoop down to eye level and grip their shoulders gently and tell them that he didn't look like himself because the mortician in this joint isn't worth shit and has clearly never heard of blush or hair gel... but as I exhaled, the psycho urge passed and I realized that (of course) these children were wiser and more balanced than I. Truthfully, kids just don't have the baggage that we do. They don't usually bring their accumulated insecurities and fears into the room; or if they do, their accumulation is miniscule as not to even register.
When my mom saw Jake at the funeral home, she tried to hide from me that she was a little freaked out, asking several times, "Aren't you worried that he will have nightmares?"
And here's the thing. Jake already has nightmares. He's just like his freakin' moms. A few weeks ago he crawled into our bed and told us he dreampt that there was a fire and he was trying to save Milo. [A FIRE?!?! Seriously? Where did that fear come from, Disney?!? I promise, we've never talked about fires around the dinner table...] And last week, he was crying because he dreamed that his grandparents left without saying goodbye. Some kids have more bad dreams than others. I've got to try to find some books to see if there's a way to teach or talk your kids out of bad dreams, because I was one of those kids. At a very early age, I dreamed scary, stressful things. I still think that is part of the reason I stay up so late- Some of those dreams are sad and exhausting- maybe it's better just to stay awake.
Anyway, I've come to believe that 1) My dreams are not necessarily premonitions. 2) Bad dreams are not something that always happens because of unrest in your conscious life. It doesn't necessarily have anything to do with your perception of safety or security. I know this because I was a very safe, protected, nurtured, sheltered child. And so are our boys.
Jake is a thinker and he reasons things out. He likes to be prepared. And even though Milo is comparitively our "spontaneous frat boy"... He also is a thinker, and a dreamer.
"You are not quite right" is what I've heard in response to the explanation that this first wake was a "dry run" for Jake. He will have to see some people he loves in coffins in the coming years and decades and this was his first. I'm sure we will have follow up conversations and clarifications, but he came through the event without a flinch or twitch or question. This was just an experience to him. Not positive. Not negative. Not even that big of a deal. Just something to stash away in his mental filing cabinet.
My working theory is sometimes (maybe) the sheltering and protecting that we do for kids is unnecessary. Sometimes (maybe) that "protecting" contributes to anxiety and unsettled emotions. (Emotions like, "What if I am not good enough? What if I can't handle all that I am asked to handle?") Trying to pad the sharp corners of the world isn't what I want to accomplish as a parent. Life is full of struggle and sadness, disappointment and grief. Our job is to teach them how to deal with downsides, show them that they can handle uncomfortable situations. Create a time and space where they can safely learn to be vulnerable and successful in struggle. I kind of believe that is the only way to fully appreciate joy and love.
Uncle George's wake was the perfect opportunity for Jake to see death. To see a body that was without it's spirit. Someone that he didn't know. An event that had no personal sadness or confusion attached to it. He observed a portion of the ritual without experiencing the associated loss/discomfort.
And when a kid that cries in the morning trying to decide what pants to wear (because he sometimes has trouble making decisions). When that kid tells me he wants to put on a tie and come with me to a wake, I'll go ahead and take him at his word. I won't tell him he can't handle it. I will stand next to him and let him see one way death can look. Because I trust Jake. Even at this young age, he is so trustworthy.
And I trust myself. I know if we stumble into a room or situation that upsets him, I will be able to talk him through that discomfort. I know Katy will always help me with that. I know she and I will resist the urge to remove painful obstacles so that our boys can learn to overcome difficulties (at least a bit) on their own. It won't always be easy. Sometimes we will fail by doing too much for them and protecting them too vigilantly and either forgetting to let them struggle or losing our steel when confronted by the reality of their discomfort. But we're lucky...
These boys already have the minds and hearts of strong, wise men. I'm so proud of them.
Me: Papa's uncle died and TT and I are going with Gram'ma Bella to the wake.
Jake: What's a wake?
Me: Well, when someone dies, there is usually a wake and a funeral... Or some kind of ceremony where you can go say goodbye, and go hug the family and tell them that you are sorry about losing the person they loved.
Jake: Who did they lose?
Me: Well, Papa's uncle George died. So Papa's cousins lost their dad, and Papa's aunt lost her husband. When someone dies, we say we "lost" them.
Jake: Oh.
I absentmindedly asked Jake if he wanted to go. It wasn't an accident exactly. He seemed interested and there is something I want to try to teach these boys early on about life being special and about death being a part of life. And about what it means to belong to a clan of people- that you have respect and are generous with your time, and sometimes you stop what you are doing to show up and bare witness at these events.
Jake: Maybe... I have to think about it.
Me: okay (In my head: "ut oh")
(I never thought he'd agree...
After a few minutes, I thought of a way to deter my 'soft pants' loving boy...)
Me: You know, if you go, you have to put some dress clothes on.
Jake: What do you mean?
Me: I mean, I am going to put work clothes on and you will have to dress up.
J: Like, in what?
Me: Like a sweater, or a shirt and tie, and church pants and shoes.
J: What sweater?
Me: I don't know... like the new one that TT bought you...
(After a few more minutes...)
Jake: I'll wear a tie.
Me: Oh... Okay. (pause) So, we should talk about what it will be like... At a wake, there is usually a box called a coffin that the person who has died will be laying in. And there will be flowers and pictures and his family will be there and we will go through and hug all of his family- Papa's aunts and uncles and cousins.
Jake: Okay.
Me: And at some wakes the coffin is closed and you can't see the person inside but sometimes the coffin is open and you will see the person.
Jake: LIKE A SKELETON?!?
Me: Oh, no... He will look like he's sleeping. He will have his clothes on and of course all his hair and his skin... Maybe his eyeglasses...
Jake: (interrupting) HE HAS EYEGLASSES?!? (The idea that he might see eye glasses seemed as shocking to him as the idea that me might see a skeleton.)
Me: (giggling) I don't know... maybe he does or maybe he doesn't... The coffin might be closed, but it might be open. And he will look like he is sleeping, but he won't be sleeping because he isn't alive anymore; remember how we talked about what happens when a person dies?
Jake: Yes.
Me: Their heart doesn't beat anymore, and they don't breathe, and their body is still there, but their spirit isn't inside their body... ?
Jake: Yes.
Me: Do you still want to go?
Jake: Yeah, but I want to wear the red tie...
Katy likes to tell people that before she met me, she had never been to a wake or funeral. And now she never stops going to them. She is gracious about this and says that if it weren't for me, she would have had no idea how to conduct herself at her grandmother's funeral. I almost skipped Uncle George's wake, but it was at her "it's the right thing to do" urging that I was getting dressed to go. As a former ICU nurse, I'm more confortable than the average bear with corpses. I sometimes have to stop and remind myself that these things can upset "lay people". There are some funerals that children should NOT attend. Very tragic, unexpected deaths... funerals where the adults are generally falling apart and so grief stricken that they are not able to look out for the emotional well being of kids in the room...
When our friend Liz's husband died leaving her widowed with 4 children (3 of the 4 were grade school age and younger), of all of the things she did that impressed me, none impressed me more than her plan for the kids. After a brief appearance at the wake, she had them brought back to the house where Katy and I played with them and fed them dinner and got them to bed. Of course they had to go to their dad's wake, but the emotions were too intense and the line at the funeral home too long to subject them to the entire event.
When my friend John died, I have this stark memory of his nieces a few feet from the coffin only 6 or 7 or 8 years old and my brain was forming the judgemental thought, "What are these parents doing letting their kids just hang around here near the casket all night?!?" when their kiddie conversation came into auditory focus:
Munchkin 1: Do you know why he doesn't look like himself?
Munchkin 2: No? Do you?
Munchkin 1: I think it's because his soul has left his body
Munchkin 2: Yeah, so it isn't really him anymore... just his body.
I had the urge to stoop down to eye level and grip their shoulders gently and tell them that he didn't look like himself because the mortician in this joint isn't worth shit and has clearly never heard of blush or hair gel... but as I exhaled, the psycho urge passed and I realized that (of course) these children were wiser and more balanced than I. Truthfully, kids just don't have the baggage that we do. They don't usually bring their accumulated insecurities and fears into the room; or if they do, their accumulation is miniscule as not to even register.
When my mom saw Jake at the funeral home, she tried to hide from me that she was a little freaked out, asking several times, "Aren't you worried that he will have nightmares?"
And here's the thing. Jake already has nightmares. He's just like his freakin' moms. A few weeks ago he crawled into our bed and told us he dreampt that there was a fire and he was trying to save Milo. [A FIRE?!?! Seriously? Where did that fear come from, Disney?!? I promise, we've never talked about fires around the dinner table...] And last week, he was crying because he dreamed that his grandparents left without saying goodbye. Some kids have more bad dreams than others. I've got to try to find some books to see if there's a way to teach or talk your kids out of bad dreams, because I was one of those kids. At a very early age, I dreamed scary, stressful things. I still think that is part of the reason I stay up so late- Some of those dreams are sad and exhausting- maybe it's better just to stay awake.
Anyway, I've come to believe that 1) My dreams are not necessarily premonitions. 2) Bad dreams are not something that always happens because of unrest in your conscious life. It doesn't necessarily have anything to do with your perception of safety or security. I know this because I was a very safe, protected, nurtured, sheltered child. And so are our boys.
Jake is a thinker and he reasons things out. He likes to be prepared. And even though Milo is comparitively our "spontaneous frat boy"... He also is a thinker, and a dreamer.
"You are not quite right" is what I've heard in response to the explanation that this first wake was a "dry run" for Jake. He will have to see some people he loves in coffins in the coming years and decades and this was his first. I'm sure we will have follow up conversations and clarifications, but he came through the event without a flinch or twitch or question. This was just an experience to him. Not positive. Not negative. Not even that big of a deal. Just something to stash away in his mental filing cabinet.
My working theory is sometimes (maybe) the sheltering and protecting that we do for kids is unnecessary. Sometimes (maybe) that "protecting" contributes to anxiety and unsettled emotions. (Emotions like, "What if I am not good enough? What if I can't handle all that I am asked to handle?") Trying to pad the sharp corners of the world isn't what I want to accomplish as a parent. Life is full of struggle and sadness, disappointment and grief. Our job is to teach them how to deal with downsides, show them that they can handle uncomfortable situations. Create a time and space where they can safely learn to be vulnerable and successful in struggle. I kind of believe that is the only way to fully appreciate joy and love.
Uncle George's wake was the perfect opportunity for Jake to see death. To see a body that was without it's spirit. Someone that he didn't know. An event that had no personal sadness or confusion attached to it. He observed a portion of the ritual without experiencing the associated loss/discomfort.
And when a kid that cries in the morning trying to decide what pants to wear (because he sometimes has trouble making decisions). When that kid tells me he wants to put on a tie and come with me to a wake, I'll go ahead and take him at his word. I won't tell him he can't handle it. I will stand next to him and let him see one way death can look. Because I trust Jake. Even at this young age, he is so trustworthy.
And I trust myself. I know if we stumble into a room or situation that upsets him, I will be able to talk him through that discomfort. I know Katy will always help me with that. I know she and I will resist the urge to remove painful obstacles so that our boys can learn to overcome difficulties (at least a bit) on their own. It won't always be easy. Sometimes we will fail by doing too much for them and protecting them too vigilantly and either forgetting to let them struggle or losing our steel when confronted by the reality of their discomfort. But we're lucky...
These boys already have the minds and hearts of strong, wise men. I'm so proud of them.
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Thursday, October 25, 2012
Pre-Election RANT... UPDATED
Every time a friend on FB "likes" Mitt Romney, I have to resist the exceedingly strong urge to DE-Fucking-Friend... and I have to sit on my hands not to write an expletive-laced response
I have a lot to say about Obama and why I think he is the right leader for the country, but in this moment, I'm not in a pro-Obama space or even an anti-Mitt space as much as I'm in a How do you stay close to people who claim to like or love you, but vote against your basic human rights?!?
I agree with Doug Wright:
"I wish my moderate Republican friends would simply be honest. They all say they're voting for Romney because of his economic policies (tenuous and ill-formed as they are), and that they disagree with him on gay rights. Fine. Then look me in the eye, speak with a level clear voice, and say, 'My taxes and take-home pay mean more than your fundamental civil rights, the sanctity of your marriage, your right to visit an ailing spouse in the hospital, your dignity as a citizen of this country, your healthcare, your right to inherit, the mental welfare and emotional well-being of your youth, and your very personhood.' It's like voting for George Wallace during the Civil Rights movements, and apologizing for his racism. You're still complicit. You're still perpetuating anti-gay legislation and cultural homophobia. You don't get to walk away clean, because you say you "disagree" with your candidate on these issues."
I would only add:
It's not close. It's not even close. These candidates are no where near each other on how they intend to treat my family if elected. It isn't abstract. It's very personal to me. With the brush of a pen, he could* reverse the incredible protections Obama has put into place for families like ours. (*Not only COULD but has promised to). Vote for Mitt if you need to, but while you are doing it, remember you are casting a sure vote against Katy and me. Whether it's for your pocketbook, your contempt of unions or environmentalists, your "pro-business" stance, your belief that the deficit will be reduced faster or the employment rate will improve quicker, or that you think we will somehow be viewed as
Stronger throughout the world... There is NO DOUBT that gay and lesbian, bisexual and transgendered Americans are better off (by a COUNTRY MILE) than they were four years ago. So, it's true, I do sort of wish my "fair minded" Republican friends would read up on this issue and just be honest: "Look, I know this guy wants to fuck with you and your newly won civil-rights, but I don't really care about that. I doubt very much you'll stop being friends with me just because I cast votes for people that vow to De-legitimize your family and legal marriage; it's frankly a risk I'm willing to take."
I agree with Doug Wright:
"I wish my moderate Republican friends would simply be honest. They all say they're voting for Romney because of his economic policies (tenuous and ill-formed as they are), and that they disagree with him on gay rights. Fine. Then look me in the eye, speak with a level clear voice, and say, 'My taxes and take-home pay mean more than your fundamental civil rights, the sanctity of your marriage, your right to visit an ailing spouse in the hospital, your dignity as a citizen of this country, your healthcare, your right to inherit, the mental welfare and emotional well-being of your youth, and your very personhood.' It's like voting for George Wallace during the Civil Rights movements, and apologizing for his racism. You're still complicit. You're still perpetuating anti-gay legislation and cultural homophobia. You don't get to walk away clean, because you say you "disagree" with your candidate on these issues."
I would only add:
It's not close. It's not even close. These candidates are no where near each other on how they intend to treat my family if elected. It isn't abstract. It's very personal to me. With the brush of a pen, he could* reverse the incredible protections Obama has put into place for families like ours. (*Not only COULD but has promised to). Vote for Mitt if you need to, but while you are doing it, remember you are casting a sure vote against Katy and me. Whether it's for your pocketbook, your contempt of unions or environmentalists, your "pro-business" stance, your belief that the deficit will be reduced faster or the employment rate will improve quicker, or that you think we will somehow be viewed as
Stronger throughout the world... There is NO DOUBT that gay and lesbian, bisexual and transgendered Americans are better off (by a COUNTRY MILE) than they were four years ago. So, it's true, I do sort of wish my "fair minded" Republican friends would read up on this issue and just be honest: "Look, I know this guy wants to fuck with you and your newly won civil-rights, but I don't really care about that. I doubt very much you'll stop being friends with me just because I cast votes for people that vow to De-legitimize your family and legal marriage; it's frankly a risk I'm willing to take."
UPDATED RANT: I went 9 rounds with a dude on a FB thread after one of my friends re-posted my above rant... Each time I responded, I said to myself: "That is all, I'm not going to respond again." But I couldn't help myself. And in the end, I decided I just couldn't let him have the last word...
It's a little immature, but yeah, that's the space I was in. Enjoy!

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012
How to honor the dead
I've been following this blog. WARNING! DO NOT CLICK LINK if you are not in the right frame of mind to read about a five year old with Cancer. Ty Louis Campbell was born 6 days after our Jake was born. He lived in another state. We've never met him, and I've only been reading his family's blog for less than 2 weeks. He's been sick with a brain tumor for 2 years. His family nicknamed him "Super Ty". And today, he died.
October 17th...
Fifteen years ago today, one of my kindred spirits died. We were 24 years old when John died. I've known and loved him since my senior year in HS; and we spent some intense "coming of age" time in those tender "late teenage/ early 20's" years together... He's been dead more than twice as long as I knew him as a living soul, but I'd be a liar if I told you I wasn't all messed up about it today. I think about John every day, but I spent a lot of today beating myself up, and just being sad. It's just fucking sad that he had to STOP while the rest of us had to keep going and fill the place in the garden where he was growing up near us.
Today, I'm 39 and 1/3 years old and the promise of FORTY looms over me like a laughing ogre. I really buy into that stuff about people are only as old as we feel or act; but truth be told-
I'm feeling old.
October 17th usually does that to me. And Stories of kids dying has a similar effect. But it's not just psychological:
My body is creaking... My gray hair is growing in, my abdomen is full and flabby. My memory is showing signs of fragility. I've spent a lot of exhausting effort- keeping survivor's guilt at bay, trying to be sure I did a little more than I might have otherwise in the name of he-who-is-no-longer-with-us. (I'm not sure I've succeeded.)
I spent the early years after John's accident working hard to be sure I did not seal off my heart. And I still do a lot of meditating on settling into and celebrating the hardships and sometimes disappointments associated with "growing up" and aging.
Feeling the weight and simultaneous levity of every birthday is intentional. I will not lie about my age. I will not regret this ticking off of the years. "I've earned these gray hairs," I like to quip. And "Not everyone gets to be this age," I repeat at least annually.
John B. Klimaszewski was about as brimming with life as a body could be. He was about as energetic and full of possibility as any of us has a chance of being. He was completely human, prone to making mistakes of all sizes. But with a smile and compassion and generous spirit that makes you want to whimper about only the good dying young. To be fair, alcohol seems to also play a role in many pre-mature deaths. But I digress... I use his full name here because he died in 1997, before Facebook, before Google, before the internet was useful or organized.
If you die when you're a child, or even a young man- how can all that potential be lost??? What happens to it? What happens to all that people wished for you?!?
If you die before Facebook or Twitter, or even Google existed, did you exist at all? Where is the public record. Newspapers and stacks of town hall documents are not being transferred to the internet, they are crumbling apart in soon to be extinct metal filing cabinets.
There is the philosophical and there is the emotional.
My heart has broken right open for Super Ty, for his parents and brother... Their story has effected me profoundly. What will they do now? How will they handle their grief? Will they be okay? My heart still aches for John. All these years later- what I wouldn't give to be retweeting his hilarious tweets and harassing him via text right now... Comparing notes and stories about our children.
I've been shy about putting posts up about John on this blog- not because there's a huge volume of things I want to write about him, necessarily, but because it somehow doesn't seem to be "MY" story to tell anymore. My story contains a different cast of characters. And I'm not sure whose permission to ask to keep telling John's story (or at least the part of his story that I am privy to).
But I guess at this late stage in the game, I'm happy to have that conversation/debate if someone comes out of the woodwork and says I can't talk about him. I am desperate for stories about him to be told. No matter what you believe related to an after life, it seems to me that you can only exist here- in the world- if there is a shared understanding of you- If you stay alive in the memories of others. If the stories about you are told.
I went into my basement... to look for pictures... of him... And found the most amazing thing- a love letter from my wife. It was written just after we had first fallen for each other. Her love: sweet and exuberant and described to me in generous, flowery, metaphorical detail; in her own lovely handwriting.
- Way before we imagined how children would enrich our life and exhaust us and deepen our love for each other.
- Way before we could comprehend the hard work required of us by marriage.
- Way before we learned to rely on each other's strengths and encouragement.
I think it's okay to spend a bit of time wallowing in grief as long as you try not to get lost in it. I think the most important thing we can do for our dead is to acknowledge them, bring them with us, (sometimes slap their pictures up on the internet and tell a few stories about them) while we carrythefuckon...
RIP Super Ty
RIP Johnny K
I love you Jake and Milo.
I love you, Katy
October 17th...
Fifteen years ago today, one of my kindred spirits died. We were 24 years old when John died. I've known and loved him since my senior year in HS; and we spent some intense "coming of age" time in those tender "late teenage/ early 20's" years together... He's been dead more than twice as long as I knew him as a living soul, but I'd be a liar if I told you I wasn't all messed up about it today. I think about John every day, but I spent a lot of today beating myself up, and just being sad. It's just fucking sad that he had to STOP while the rest of us had to keep going and fill the place in the garden where he was growing up near us.
Today, I'm 39 and 1/3 years old and the promise of FORTY looms over me like a laughing ogre. I really buy into that stuff about people are only as old as we feel or act; but truth be told-
I'm feeling old.
October 17th usually does that to me. And Stories of kids dying has a similar effect. But it's not just psychological:
My body is creaking... My gray hair is growing in, my abdomen is full and flabby. My memory is showing signs of fragility. I've spent a lot of exhausting effort- keeping survivor's guilt at bay, trying to be sure I did a little more than I might have otherwise in the name of he-who-is-no-longer-with-us. (I'm not sure I've succeeded.)
I spent the early years after John's accident working hard to be sure I did not seal off my heart. And I still do a lot of meditating on settling into and celebrating the hardships and sometimes disappointments associated with "growing up" and aging.
Feeling the weight and simultaneous levity of every birthday is intentional. I will not lie about my age. I will not regret this ticking off of the years. "I've earned these gray hairs," I like to quip. And "Not everyone gets to be this age," I repeat at least annually.
John B. Klimaszewski was about as brimming with life as a body could be. He was about as energetic and full of possibility as any of us has a chance of being. He was completely human, prone to making mistakes of all sizes. But with a smile and compassion and generous spirit that makes you want to whimper about only the good dying young. To be fair, alcohol seems to also play a role in many pre-mature deaths. But I digress... I use his full name here because he died in 1997, before Facebook, before Google, before the internet was useful or organized.
If you die when you're a child, or even a young man- how can all that potential be lost??? What happens to it? What happens to all that people wished for you?!?
If you die before Facebook or Twitter, or even Google existed, did you exist at all? Where is the public record. Newspapers and stacks of town hall documents are not being transferred to the internet, they are crumbling apart in soon to be extinct metal filing cabinets.
There is the philosophical and there is the emotional.
My heart has broken right open for Super Ty, for his parents and brother... Their story has effected me profoundly. What will they do now? How will they handle their grief? Will they be okay? My heart still aches for John. All these years later- what I wouldn't give to be retweeting his hilarious tweets and harassing him via text right now... Comparing notes and stories about our children.
I've been shy about putting posts up about John on this blog- not because there's a huge volume of things I want to write about him, necessarily, but because it somehow doesn't seem to be "MY" story to tell anymore. My story contains a different cast of characters. And I'm not sure whose permission to ask to keep telling John's story (or at least the part of his story that I am privy to).
But I guess at this late stage in the game, I'm happy to have that conversation/debate if someone comes out of the woodwork and says I can't talk about him. I am desperate for stories about him to be told. No matter what you believe related to an after life, it seems to me that you can only exist here- in the world- if there is a shared understanding of you- If you stay alive in the memories of others. If the stories about you are told.
I went into my basement... to look for pictures... of him... And found the most amazing thing- a love letter from my wife. It was written just after we had first fallen for each other. Her love: sweet and exuberant and described to me in generous, flowery, metaphorical detail; in her own lovely handwriting.
- Way before we imagined how children would enrich our life and exhaust us and deepen our love for each other.
- Way before we could comprehend the hard work required of us by marriage.
- Way before we learned to rely on each other's strengths and encouragement.
I think it's okay to spend a bit of time wallowing in grief as long as you try not to get lost in it. I think the most important thing we can do for our dead is to acknowledge them, bring them with us, (sometimes slap their pictures up on the internet and tell a few stories about them) while we carrythefuckon...
RIP Super Ty
RIP Johnny K
I love you Jake and Milo.
I love you, Katy
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Saturday, May 26, 2012
Happy Birthday, Jimbo
Summers come and summers go. Summers fly by.
But these last few summers have been some of the best of my life.
Having kids- even little kids that aren't in school yet- has made me realize how ingrained in our memories a concept like "summer" can be. And how important "living" (spending time with people you care about, splashing and playing and trying not to get sunburned) is to learning about the world. The experience of "summer" is a blessing that I am proud to be able to share and pass on to my kids.
I imagine if we didn't know Jimbo and Sue, we would have figured out another way to create a summer for our children. But I'm so grateful that we have these friends.
Jimbo and Sue open the pool in May and close it well into September. The pool is heated and I mean to at least the mid-80s. There's a full size refrigerator, a shaded TV area to watch the Red Sox, and enough seating for at least 25 on a daily basis.
There was a "TBR pool" in my childhood (that was owned and operated by Jimbo's parents). The rules at that pool were simple:
- Please come to the pool
- Come to the pool anytime, day or night
- Bring anyone to the pool that you wish
- Bring anything to eat or drink
- If you do not bring food- some will be provided for you
- Please don't even call- just come over if you want to swim
- If we aren't home, you know how to get in (to the pool and the house) no need to wait for us to take a dip or have a beer out of the fridge.
When Jim and Maizie (Jimbo's parents) sold their house and the pool of my childhood memories sometime around 2000 or 2001 (I think), my mom called me:
"I don't want to forget to tell you," she started, "The TBR's sold their house. They are moving next month."
My mouth went dry. I was a little sad in that "end of an era" kind of way, but mostly, I was stunned into the realization that had my mom not made this call in a timely fashion, I might have been on the business end of some handcuffs and fingerprinting ink.
As I walked into their new pad, the experience of greeting total strangers who were acting completely "at home" in the TBR's house would not have tipped me off. I can imagine the change in furniture might strike me as surprising, but it wouldn't stop me from checking out what beverages might be in the mini fridge on the porch. They would have had plenty of time to call the cops as I laid my towel on the fence, disrobed, and dove into their new pool...
Fortunately for my family, Jimbo and Sue continued on the "mi casa es su casa" tradition. Same pool rules with at least one bizarre addition: No plastic cups or dishes at the pool. (What can I say, Sue really likes to wash dishes and clean up broken glass, poolside...) With 4 children age six and under, my sister and I have negotiated our way around this regulation.
I've known Jimbo my entire life. I've actually known him longer that that. He and my dad were best buddies in high school. When we were young, my parents didn't do that surrogate "aunt" and "uncle" thing that Katy and I are inclined to do as a way to introduce our very close friends to our children. As one of 8 children and one of 4 children, respectively, I guess Mom and Dad figured, there were enough uncles and aunts to keep straight without adding more titles. If Jimbo was like an uncle to me, it was mostly because his sisters were like aunts to me and by the power of the transitive properties, the brother of an aunt has to be an uncle...
But I was so shy when I was little, and Jimbo is not exactly a chatterbox. I'm not sure I said more than 20 words to him until I was in high school. His kids were in need of babysitters when I was just exiting that "babysitting age", so for a couple of decades, our 2 families had very little in common, except some cherished holidays that we spent together.
Fast forward 20 more years. In some ways assisted by the "staggered" generations, there is an extended family here that we have chosen, and it is as strong as any family forged in DNA or bonded by blood. When I think of my dad eulogizing his parents, I see Jimbo and Sue in the pews behind us in a church that was foreign to them, and then scampering about, helping with food, acting as a protective presence after the services as well.
When I think of our children being born, I look right past the huge gift basket that Sue presented us to the beaming, excited smile on her face, and the chiding "My little dog
comes first, but I am going to love these kids!!!"
So similar to his dad before him, Jimbo is successful and proud- yet, humble. He is quiet yet fun. He is generous as to make generosity seem obvious. I've never seen him lose his cool. Even when I've seen him in tumultuous situations and/or embroiled in conflict, I've never seen him riled up or contemptuous or even the slightest bit indignant. He's not particularly religious (that I can tell) but he generally acts out the "do unto others adage" without giving it a moment's thought. He has fed and clothed and bathed (and offered a pool to) not only me and people he loves, but any stranger that any of us leads onto his property.
Last summer we watched Jimbo's mom slip mostly away- deeper and deeper into Alzheimer's. I'd sit by her with the kids explaining over and over who we were. Even under a veil of memory loss, she was who I've always know her to be: polite, full of smiles and gentle laughs, occasionally opinionated and strong-willed. She'd sit poolside in the evening and when Jimbo walked in, she'd light up. She'd go straight to him or call him over... It became clear that Maizie frequently thought Jimbo was her husband. Son or husband, she wanted to just be near him. And there they often sat, hand in hand for a bit of time. It was hard to watch but harder to look away from: Heartbreaking but thoroughly endearing. As he ages, it is impossible not to see why his mom would be confused. If you didn't know G'pa Jim (Jimbo's dad), it won't mean as much, but the apple did not fall far from the tree, as they say.
Whether golfing or riding a motorcycle, or watching a movie, a ball game, playing a board game, just being in his presence helps me appreciate the healing powers of socialization, of community Rest and Relaxation. To be with him is to see a man SIT and experience joy and contentment, to appreciate the little things (and the big things). Spending time by his side, I feel I have learned to be better at relaxing at having fun.
Because of Jimbo and Sue, our recent and current summers are not just long and lazy, they are full and rich. They are not trite. The pool is where we bring our laughter and silliness, but also where we bring our stresses and sorrows, where we share and try to swim away our anxieties. It's where I bring my boys to cool off and learn to swim and to experience a certain civility that might be dying out in the world; and where we are lucky enough to watch a lot of our dreams come true.
Happy Birthday, Jimbo! We love you!
But these last few summers have been some of the best of my life.
Having kids- even little kids that aren't in school yet- has made me realize how ingrained in our memories a concept like "summer" can be. And how important "living" (spending time with people you care about, splashing and playing and trying not to get sunburned) is to learning about the world. The experience of "summer" is a blessing that I am proud to be able to share and pass on to my kids.
I imagine if we didn't know Jimbo and Sue, we would have figured out another way to create a summer for our children. But I'm so grateful that we have these friends.
Jimbo and Sue open the pool in May and close it well into September. The pool is heated and I mean to at least the mid-80s. There's a full size refrigerator, a shaded TV area to watch the Red Sox, and enough seating for at least 25 on a daily basis.
There was a "TBR pool" in my childhood (that was owned and operated by Jimbo's parents). The rules at that pool were simple:
- Please come to the pool
- Come to the pool anytime, day or night
- Bring anyone to the pool that you wish
- Bring anything to eat or drink
- If you do not bring food- some will be provided for you
- Please don't even call- just come over if you want to swim
- If we aren't home, you know how to get in (to the pool and the house) no need to wait for us to take a dip or have a beer out of the fridge.
When Jim and Maizie (Jimbo's parents) sold their house and the pool of my childhood memories sometime around 2000 or 2001 (I think), my mom called me:
"I don't want to forget to tell you," she started, "The TBR's sold their house. They are moving next month."
My mouth went dry. I was a little sad in that "end of an era" kind of way, but mostly, I was stunned into the realization that had my mom not made this call in a timely fashion, I might have been on the business end of some handcuffs and fingerprinting ink.
As I walked into their new pad, the experience of greeting total strangers who were acting completely "at home" in the TBR's house would not have tipped me off. I can imagine the change in furniture might strike me as surprising, but it wouldn't stop me from checking out what beverages might be in the mini fridge on the porch. They would have had plenty of time to call the cops as I laid my towel on the fence, disrobed, and dove into their new pool...
Fortunately for my family, Jimbo and Sue continued on the "mi casa es su casa" tradition. Same pool rules with at least one bizarre addition: No plastic cups or dishes at the pool. (What can I say, Sue really likes to wash dishes and clean up broken glass, poolside...) With 4 children age six and under, my sister and I have negotiated our way around this regulation.
I've known Jimbo my entire life. I've actually known him longer that that. He and my dad were best buddies in high school. When we were young, my parents didn't do that surrogate "aunt" and "uncle" thing that Katy and I are inclined to do as a way to introduce our very close friends to our children. As one of 8 children and one of 4 children, respectively, I guess Mom and Dad figured, there were enough uncles and aunts to keep straight without adding more titles. If Jimbo was like an uncle to me, it was mostly because his sisters were like aunts to me and by the power of the transitive properties, the brother of an aunt has to be an uncle...
But I was so shy when I was little, and Jimbo is not exactly a chatterbox. I'm not sure I said more than 20 words to him until I was in high school. His kids were in need of babysitters when I was just exiting that "babysitting age", so for a couple of decades, our 2 families had very little in common, except some cherished holidays that we spent together.
Fast forward 20 more years. In some ways assisted by the "staggered" generations, there is an extended family here that we have chosen, and it is as strong as any family forged in DNA or bonded by blood. When I think of my dad eulogizing his parents, I see Jimbo and Sue in the pews behind us in a church that was foreign to them, and then scampering about, helping with food, acting as a protective presence after the services as well.
When I think of our children being born, I look right past the huge gift basket that Sue presented us to the beaming, excited smile on her face, and the chiding "My little dog
comes first, but I am going to love these kids!!!"
So similar to his dad before him, Jimbo is successful and proud- yet, humble. He is quiet yet fun. He is generous as to make generosity seem obvious. I've never seen him lose his cool. Even when I've seen him in tumultuous situations and/or embroiled in conflict, I've never seen him riled up or contemptuous or even the slightest bit indignant. He's not particularly religious (that I can tell) but he generally acts out the "do unto others adage" without giving it a moment's thought. He has fed and clothed and bathed (and offered a pool to) not only me and people he loves, but any stranger that any of us leads onto his property.
Last summer we watched Jimbo's mom slip mostly away- deeper and deeper into Alzheimer's. I'd sit by her with the kids explaining over and over who we were. Even under a veil of memory loss, she was who I've always know her to be: polite, full of smiles and gentle laughs, occasionally opinionated and strong-willed. She'd sit poolside in the evening and when Jimbo walked in, she'd light up. She'd go straight to him or call him over... It became clear that Maizie frequently thought Jimbo was her husband. Son or husband, she wanted to just be near him. And there they often sat, hand in hand for a bit of time. It was hard to watch but harder to look away from: Heartbreaking but thoroughly endearing. As he ages, it is impossible not to see why his mom would be confused. If you didn't know G'pa Jim (Jimbo's dad), it won't mean as much, but the apple did not fall far from the tree, as they say.
Whether golfing or riding a motorcycle, or watching a movie, a ball game, playing a board game, just being in his presence helps me appreciate the healing powers of socialization, of community Rest and Relaxation. To be with him is to see a man SIT and experience joy and contentment, to appreciate the little things (and the big things). Spending time by his side, I feel I have learned to be better at relaxing at having fun.
Because of Jimbo and Sue, our recent and current summers are not just long and lazy, they are full and rich. They are not trite. The pool is where we bring our laughter and silliness, but also where we bring our stresses and sorrows, where we share and try to swim away our anxieties. It's where I bring my boys to cool off and learn to swim and to experience a certain civility that might be dying out in the world; and where we are lucky enough to watch a lot of our dreams come true.
Happy Birthday, Jimbo! We love you!
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Friday, May 25, 2012
Brainwashing and programming of summer memories
Pizza: Sally's
Major league baseball: Red Sox
Minor league baseball: (a tie) Dayton Dragons and the New Britain Rockcats
Pool or ocean: both!
Hot dogs: Blackies (though Glenwood is totally acceptable)
Milo: (takes a bite of hot dog and spits it out) I NO LIKE IT!
Mommy: (in the voice of a snake oil salesman) Yes, you do like it, of course you like it! That's a Blackies HOT DOG! We don't spit out Blackies hot dogs!!! Take another bite.
Milo: (takes another bite): I LIKE IT!
Mommy: Hooray!!!
Major league baseball: Red Sox
Minor league baseball: (a tie) Dayton Dragons and the New Britain Rockcats
Pool or ocean: both!
Hot dogs: Blackies (though Glenwood is totally acceptable)
Milo: (takes a bite of hot dog and spits it out) I NO LIKE IT!
Mommy: (in the voice of a snake oil salesman) Yes, you do like it, of course you like it! That's a Blackies HOT DOG! We don't spit out Blackies hot dogs!!! Take another bite.
Milo: (takes another bite): I LIKE IT!
Mommy: Hooray!!!
Labels:
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Monday, January 31, 2011
What doesn't kill us makes us...
Stronger...
Yesterday, I spent the better part of 7 hours up on our roof, shoveling and clearing ice.
It was a nice warm day (42 degrees when the sun was out) and the sun kept going in and out.
It was a little brutal, if I am honest. The snow was literally up to my thighs. Like the rings of a tree, there were all the layers of the storms we have had. I am well aware that we have had over 55 inches of snow this January, but somehow, standing up there, I could not get over how much shoveling had to be done. I wanted to quit so many times, but I knew if I got down and took a break, I did not have it in me to climb the ladder again. So I stayed and did the job as best I could. I used a hatchet at the edges, near the gutters where there was 4-6" of solid ice on roof near the gutter in the back yard (the South side of the house) and 10-12" of ice in the front yard (on the North side).
While I was up there, I seemed to be experiencing the stages of grief

First I was like, "this won't take long at all... it's a beautiful day! And getting up here at all is really the hardest part."
Then I spent a few hours sputtering a fuming inexplicably- pissed at Katy somehow (WHY wasn't she checking on me more often?!? Why hasn't she figured out a way to play some music for me?!?). Then turning the anger towards other members of my family- and friends that aggrieved or abandoned me (both living and dead).
I turned to Jesus a few times... "Help me out here, Lord, Please, I'll do anything..."
Then I got sad.
Really sad- strangely sad, thinking sad things as if I were alone in the wilderness and not on the roof of my own home. It was then that the events of last week (weather and baby's illness aside) came back to me... That we experienced the 2nd death of 2011. A friend of our family, Kevin. And then the "stages of grief" exercise that my brain was taking on didn't seem so totally strange.
Kevin married into the Tabor clan - whom I've spoken about here when G'pa Jim died and countless other times (especially when talking about the pool in the summer). The tabors are our family. The family we chose, choose, and continue to choose. My parents grew up with them and so did my sister and I.
They are some of the few people that know me now who also knew me when I was a shy, skinny kid. They helped me grow up. They encouraged my budding sense of humor, my musicality, my athleticism, my intellectual pursuits, and that I be honest and follow my heart. There's a stagger in the generations and sometimes I have more in common with the "adults" and sometimes I have more in common with the "kids" (we are all adults now so the gap is getting more narrow...) but I used to babysit for the kids of my babysitters and now those same kids, I occasionally call on to sit for my kids. It's a little convoluted, but it works. When I need advice or help, I call on my aunts, uncles and cousins in this "adopted" family as much as in my "real" family.
Kevin married one of Jim's daughters and they had 2 daughters of their own. They had a wonderful life, but at some point, the marriage stopped working.
Kevin was in NYC the day the towers fell. He called home to say he was okay and on his way home, and then he disappeared for 6 or 8 hours. The "radio silence" was in part due to a lack of phone service, but it turned out his "escape" was delayed when he was distracted by helping rescue workers sift through rubble some before making his way out of there. I remember getting a call that told me he was safe. And then I got a call saying he was missing. I remember hours and hours going by and I worked hard pushing the thought out of my head that we would never see him again. Then he came home, but he was never really the same after that. I only saw him once or twice again. His marriage had started falling apart before September 11th, and took some time to completely crumble. But even when we were all together, he always found a way to disappear from a crowded party after that.
Up on the roof yesterday, I couldn't help think of him and all this stuff I either hadn't thought of before, or hadn't thought of in a long time. He died last Saturday, January 22 at the age of 57. He died of natural causes after quite a few years (and reportedly several consecutive days) of abusing his body with not-so-healthy substances. He leaves behind 2 beautiful, strong, and heartbroken children. And a mess of us that miss him- what he was, what he could have been; plus the sadness that comes from knowing he experienced a lot of emotional pain and/or psychological anguish that couldn't be extinguished.
When I heard of his death, I had a very intellectual reaction that essentially amounted to, "That's so sad." When I went to the memorial service, and saw photos of him and saw his family- family that my heart recognizes as "my" family... i had a very emotional reaction. It surprised me. To suddenly be weeping and missing so urgently, someone I hadn't seen or spoken to for most of a decade...
Up on the roof, in the clear, cold air, I realized I was a bit of an emotional basket case. I was angry that this had to happen to him. Angry that he couldn't figure out a way to make himself whole. Sad and disturbed that the chance he could somehow make things better or right was gone forever. Sick that sometimes in the world, things just don't work out. Sad for my childhood and a time when there was less gray area in all aspects of life... I was glad to have all that physical labor to help me work it out.
Today, I am either sick, or just exhausted. So many parts of my body are sore: fingers, toes, arms, legs, neck, back; my throat is raw, my sinuses constantly draining post-nasal drip, my stomach full of mucus, my head pounding.
The weather forecast is not mild- the winter machine is starting again... the next three days might entirely erase all my hard work on the roof. But I feel I've done something to try to protect our property and our family, and that is something, at least.
Labels:
by TWT,
Death,
Eulogy,
Exhaustion,
Family History,
Friends,
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Illness,
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The weather
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Bean
This is a re-post from 2 years ago... the time gone by has changed, but not the sentiment.
-------------

Just a shout out to our Bean. We can't believe it will be 5 years this summer since you died. We keep you close every day and try to live up to and honor your zest for life, your love for family, your willingness to jump under a car hood to help a friend.
You would'a loved these kids, Bean. Hope you;re watching them.
I think you are right here with us, the very sparkle in their little eyes.
XXXOOO!!! Happy Birthday, Bean!
-------------

Just a shout out to our Bean. We can't believe it will be 5 years this summer since you died. We keep you close every day and try to live up to and honor your zest for life, your love for family, your willingness to jump under a car hood to help a friend.
You would'a loved these kids, Bean. Hope you;re watching them.
I think you are right here with us, the very sparkle in their little eyes.
XXXOOO!!! Happy Birthday, Bean!
Labels:
Anniversaries,
by TWT,
Cars/ driving,
Death,
Family,
Family History
Monday, November 08, 2010
Justice is not vengeance
A jury sentenced a killer to death today in Connecticut on all 6 capital felony convictions.
The result was the only one that could have been reached.
It was just and as Dr. Petit said, "Justice is not vengeance."
Still, this result means nothing. It will not undo one thing that was done.
Nothing will bring back J, H, or M.
Nothing will change what was lost.
Nothing will give back what was taken.
Nothing will fix one of the thousands of things that was broken.
sign. uggh. yuck.
The result was the only one that could have been reached.
It was just and as Dr. Petit said, "Justice is not vengeance."
Still, this result means nothing. It will not undo one thing that was done.
Nothing will bring back J, H, or M.
Nothing will change what was lost.
Nothing will give back what was taken.
Nothing will fix one of the thousands of things that was broken.
sign. uggh. yuck.
Wednesday, October 06, 2010
The first Trial
The verdict is in- 16 guilty counts and 1 not guilty (on the charge of 1st degree arson).
I'm glad for these results... but still heart sick.
Now the jury must decide the sentence.
I'm glad for these results... but still heart sick.
Now the jury must decide the sentence.
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Go to bed, already.
Tomorrow, we will try to spend the day demonstrating pleasantness in the midst of our anxiety and discomfort.
Tomorrow, we will try to remember the spirit of women who were pretty damn good role models even before the mantle of sainthood was placed on their memories.
Tomorrow, we will let our bodies and minds fight it out... Our minds want to be in charge of our emotions, but grief and anger have a way of marking you physically. And "the body" sometimes has a more accurate memory than even "the memory".
Tomorrow, we will cherish our children.
(A little more than we do every other day.)
Tomorrow, we will try to be gentle with each other.
Tomorrow, we will try to be generous and a little more patient than we usually need to be in our interactions with others...
But TONIGHT, before I go to bed, I'm going to check every window and every door (like Katy made me promise to do) to be sure they are locked. And I'm going to say a silent, but heartfelt "fuck you" to the psychotic criminals who killed our friends 3 years ago...
Then I'm going to wash the destructive anger off my face, and brush the bile off of my teeth, and try to shake the gnawing anxiety from my core. And THEN, I'm going to hold my wife close- hoping that my love and concern can keep bad dreams at bay- and trying to convey to her through my actions that no matter what, I'm here with her and I love her... and I'm sorry for the losses she has endured.
------------
Our church benediction:
Go out into the world in peace
Have courage
Hold onto what is good
Return to no person evil for evil
Strengthen the fainthearted
Support the weak
Help the suffering
Honor all beings
Amen.
Tomorrow, we will try to remember the spirit of women who were pretty damn good role models even before the mantle of sainthood was placed on their memories.
Tomorrow, we will let our bodies and minds fight it out... Our minds want to be in charge of our emotions, but grief and anger have a way of marking you physically. And "the body" sometimes has a more accurate memory than even "the memory".
Tomorrow, we will cherish our children.
(A little more than we do every other day.)
Tomorrow, we will try to be gentle with each other.
Tomorrow, we will try to be generous and a little more patient than we usually need to be in our interactions with others...
But TONIGHT, before I go to bed, I'm going to check every window and every door (like Katy made me promise to do) to be sure they are locked. And I'm going to say a silent, but heartfelt "fuck you" to the psychotic criminals who killed our friends 3 years ago...
Then I'm going to wash the destructive anger off my face, and brush the bile off of my teeth, and try to shake the gnawing anxiety from my core. And THEN, I'm going to hold my wife close- hoping that my love and concern can keep bad dreams at bay- and trying to convey to her through my actions that no matter what, I'm here with her and I love her... and I'm sorry for the losses she has endured.
------------
Our church benediction:
Go out into the world in peace
Have courage
Hold onto what is good
Return to no person evil for evil
Strengthen the fainthearted
Support the weak
Help the suffering
Honor all beings
Amen.
Sunday, May 09, 2010
Shout out to my Nightingale...

"Nurse's week" started sometime either last Wednesday or last Monday.
If you google this holiday, you will see some discrepancies and inconsistencies about the dates... I digress...
For most of my life as a nurse, i really viewed this as a hallmark holiday:
Thanks for the shout-out, Hallmark, no matter how much money you make on cards this year, you can't possibly know about being a nurse and therefore, not really honor it.When I was a teen? pre-tween? I'm not sure when this show was on... I was addicted to China Beach. Looking back, I had a serious crush on Lt. Colleen McMurphy:
Yum:


There I go digressing again... Anyway... Sometimes I credited this show to making me want to be a nurse, I didn't want to go to war, but i could really relate to this character- Irish, catholic, who wanted to DO something that mattered, but then in the middle of it was like, "What the hell am I doing?!?"
I think i was surprised when I worked in the ICU (years later) how much it could feel like you were living through a war even though you were in a civilian hospital during "peace" time. The woman and men that I nursed with in the ICU were amazing: smart, sassy, with the quickest wit and the crass-est, sickest senses of humor you can imagine. You've got to have a strong stomach and a lot of patience for shit (of the literal and bull variety.) And they did. And they laughed and cried and picked people and pools of blood up off the floor. And we ordered Chinese take out in the middle of cardiac codes, and helped families accept the death of their loved ones, and talked and taught and fought the doctors to get them to HEAR what the patients were saying.
I wear that experience like a badge of honor on my soul. But even so, it never made me view nurses day outside of the scope of cynicism. (see made up sassy bark to Hallmark corp above...)
Then this year... when I'm so far removed from clinical care of patients that I've started to call myself a "fake" nurse, Katy wins a Nightingale Award. This is a statewide recognition of nursing excellence. And sitting next to her at the ceremony, something changes a little in me. A little of the cynicism melts away. It is more than being proud of her and thrilled that she was recognized for all the amazing work she does and has done. (Though I am and I was). It had a lot to do with what happened last October and Last January, and Last September...
A nurse was there kind of saving and protecting us when ML gushed into the world.
A nurse was there in my most terrified moments, when I wouldn't even let myself think my worst fear about his illness and fevers and seizures three weeks later.
A nurse was up all night with us when his fever wouldn't come down.
A nurse was there to help get him help when he was having seizures.
Nurses were there, talking to and teaching and sometimes fighting the doctors on our behalf.
A nurse was there during all the LPs, during the MRI, during the EEG.
... During the nights, the early mornings, and the long afternoons.
A nurse was there to help us get some rest and to help us ask the right questions.
To help us calm down a little at certain points and and to get us riled up a little at others.
Then a few months later for JB's surgery... more nurses.
Many of them nameless to me now.
Keeping us sane...
It's different when it's your kid, I guess- those cliches about angels seem somehow less "cliche-y"
There's not a greeting card out there that can convey what those nurses did for us, but now there IS a part of me that has the inclination to buy a few and TRY to convey it...
But then, here we are on Mother's day. And as I write this, my pretty Nightingale Award winner is sleeping upstairs in our bed. She's an amazing mother. Tonight, she got JB to turn off a "Terrible 2" tantrum by suggesting that he could take his "bad attitude" and decide (IF HE WANTED TO) to put that bad attitude in his hand and throw it away and choose to be in a better mood. (I swear this is true.) And what do you think that little
blink.
blink.
blink.
Thank God I'm on this journey with such an insanely talented and smart woman. I just love her and hope she knows how much! Cause I didn't get to sign the card I bought for her today...
Happy nurses week and mother's day, baby.
As part of my gift to you, I am going to (be extremely quiet as I come) crawl into bed next to you to sleep this day off!
All my love, Me
xoxo
Friday, May 07, 2010
Put your hands in the air, shake your derriere
While JB was keeping us
Learned to CLAP,
WAVE
AND CRAWL:
On one of the bad mornings when it was all about JB, ML was in the apx 12'x12' Family room- which has about 7'x9' of roaming space, when the furniture, etc is considered...
The first time we left ML unattended for a few minutes, he had wormed over to the fire place and was nibbling on the slate of the outer hearth.
The second time, we found him under the overturned play-gym- not helpless on his back- but crawling forward, like a giddy-up-and-go turtle.
The third time, he had crawled over to where the laptop was and got his fat hands on the power cord...
GAME OVER, ML. Now you can't be trusted to continue making us look good. Therefore, we will watch you like a hawk... way to earn yourself some attention! Strong work...
How cute is this kid?!?
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Birthday Shout OUT
Today's my mom's birthday.
3.7 decades ago she was a newly-wed waiting for me to arrive.
She had a whole life before then, but let's focus on the part that includes me, shall we?
My mom worked hard to protect me from danger and to shield me from her fears...
She made sure I learned how to swim so that I could enjoy the ocean without anxiety...
Also, i didn't learn that she is terrified of heights until years after she accompanied us on that crazy pirate-ship amusement ride that we wanted to go on.
My mom worked hard to develop my self esteem and teach me about my worth.
Even though there were times in my life when her hopes and dreams for me felt like heavy "expectations", I never felt like I wasn't enough. Even though my childhood didn't really prepare me for the day I might realize I was gay, I never had a moment of doubt that I deserved every bit of the torrential amount of love that poured down on me.
My mom worked hard to better herself for the financial and emotional stability of our family. She attended night classes for years and never settled for a "B" if an "A" was within her reach.
She (and my dad) taught me that there will always be someone better than me;
and better off than me.
And there will always be someone worse than me;
and worse off than me.
There will always be people smarter than me;
and always be people not as smart as me...
... Insert: Rich, kind, lucky, wise, talented, musical, successful, etc
For me, that was a really helpful way to understand the world.
A slightly different take on the golden rule.
My mom is an overprotective worrier by nature. But she is KICK-Ass in an emergency or if there is a problem to be solved. When I worked in the ICU, she always told me, "I could never do what you do." But I'm not sure why she didn't realize it: That I learned the level-headedness required in that role from watching her: pull together Hopi Indian dioramas the night before they were due, create last minute costumes for a cast of 50, organize impromptu meals on wheels rotations for friends with chronic illnesses, drives to the hospital with grandparents in the middle of the night... When you think about it, applying pressure to a geysering femoral artery, throwing a hemodynamically unstable patient into a trendelenburg position, starting ACLS logarithms while simultaneously getting family members to step outside their loved one's room- these are the ICU nurse version of the same "mom" techniques - it is all about keeping internal panic and external chaos at bay and taking it one step at a time.
I don't know if maybe all moms are good at this,
but my mom is GOOD at this!
When my mom taught me about life I think she tried to be as honest as she had the words to be.
It's not always fair.
It's not always as bad as it seems.
Most things are more complicated than the people on either side of a debate would have you believe. Related to sex and puberty, there were specifics (with accompanying drawings) and conversations that were more esoteric and vague. I don't remember what was said, but I know I was taught to expect passion and desire that no one could rightly describe, for my experience would be unique. I know I was taught that intimacy shouldn't be left only to those new feelings and passions, that you should PLAN to give your brain a say too. It was conveyed to me that sex was better labeled as "un-erasable" than as "good" or "bad": a decision or event that cannot be taken back or un-done. These frank conversations helped guide me into strong, healthy relationships; and to a place of knowing that my mind, heart, and body each had a role in determining my destiny related to loving other people.
The first time I remember being truly heartbroken Mom told me: It will never be the way it was before, but it will turn out better than you can imagine right now. In all of my heartbreaks, she has found a way to tell me or show me a similar message. Without coming off like a know-it-all, she offers a quiet wisdom that is respectful of the pain of the moment while affirming the general value of difficult circumstances, and the benefits offered by the passage of time.
She has watched me grieve - standing close by, resisting the urge "try to make it better".
She has witnessed me wounded- biting her own lip in pain.
She's spent time waiting for me to come out of my various funks.
She has lived in confusion when she didn't know what was going on with me or how to relate to me.
She's has shared her friends with me, and taught me how to cook for and entertain crowds of people.
She's taught me how to worry, AND how to push anxiety back down for utility's sake.
She has always welcomed anyone I brought into her home, often feeding and mending the parts of my friends and companions that were hungry or scared. She has encouraged me to mend rifts and not let pride or selfishness get in the way of relationships.
Because of her, I trust God.
Because of her, I believe in love.
Because of her, I am not afraid to ask for help.
Because of her, I know I am not perfect, but I know I can do better.
Because of her, (let's face it) I enjoy food a little too much;
and always feel a little guilty going to bed early.
I have always had a good deal of gratitude and admiration for my mom, but when I had kids of my own, something shifted. As a Nana, my mom cares for these little ones physically and globally. And she supports their parents with gentle humility. One day a short while ago, she took care of 4 babies on a snow day, made us all dinner, and then still had the energy/patience to call me later that night (I had been complaining a little about a frustrating phase JB was going through) to tell me, "These times are hard, hang in there."
I guess I just never expected to still continue to feel this much love and nurturing beyond the womb.
i love you, mom.
Happy Birthday!
3.7 decades ago she was a newly-wed waiting for me to arrive.
She had a whole life before then, but let's focus on the part that includes me, shall we?
My mom worked hard to protect me from danger and to shield me from her fears...
She made sure I learned how to swim so that I could enjoy the ocean without anxiety...
Also, i didn't learn that she is terrified of heights until years after she accompanied us on that crazy pirate-ship amusement ride that we wanted to go on.
My mom worked hard to develop my self esteem and teach me about my worth.
Even though there were times in my life when her hopes and dreams for me felt like heavy "expectations", I never felt like I wasn't enough. Even though my childhood didn't really prepare me for the day I might realize I was gay, I never had a moment of doubt that I deserved every bit of the torrential amount of love that poured down on me.
My mom worked hard to better herself for the financial and emotional stability of our family. She attended night classes for years and never settled for a "B" if an "A" was within her reach.
She (and my dad) taught me that there will always be someone better than me;
and better off than me.
And there will always be someone worse than me;
and worse off than me.
There will always be people smarter than me;
and always be people not as smart as me...
... Insert: Rich, kind, lucky, wise, talented, musical, successful, etc
For me, that was a really helpful way to understand the world.
A slightly different take on the golden rule.
My mom is an overprotective worrier by nature. But she is KICK-Ass in an emergency or if there is a problem to be solved. When I worked in the ICU, she always told me, "I could never do what you do." But I'm not sure why she didn't realize it: That I learned the level-headedness required in that role from watching her: pull together Hopi Indian dioramas the night before they were due, create last minute costumes for a cast of 50, organize impromptu meals on wheels rotations for friends with chronic illnesses, drives to the hospital with grandparents in the middle of the night... When you think about it, applying pressure to a geysering femoral artery, throwing a hemodynamically unstable patient into a trendelenburg position, starting ACLS logarithms while simultaneously getting family members to step outside their loved one's room- these are the ICU nurse version of the same "mom" techniques - it is all about keeping internal panic and external chaos at bay and taking it one step at a time.
I don't know if maybe all moms are good at this,
but my mom is GOOD at this!
When my mom taught me about life I think she tried to be as honest as she had the words to be.
It's not always fair.
It's not always as bad as it seems.
Most things are more complicated than the people on either side of a debate would have you believe. Related to sex and puberty, there were specifics (with accompanying drawings) and conversations that were more esoteric and vague. I don't remember what was said, but I know I was taught to expect passion and desire that no one could rightly describe, for my experience would be unique. I know I was taught that intimacy shouldn't be left only to those new feelings and passions, that you should PLAN to give your brain a say too. It was conveyed to me that sex was better labeled as "un-erasable" than as "good" or "bad": a decision or event that cannot be taken back or un-done. These frank conversations helped guide me into strong, healthy relationships; and to a place of knowing that my mind, heart, and body each had a role in determining my destiny related to loving other people.
The first time I remember being truly heartbroken Mom told me: It will never be the way it was before, but it will turn out better than you can imagine right now. In all of my heartbreaks, she has found a way to tell me or show me a similar message. Without coming off like a know-it-all, she offers a quiet wisdom that is respectful of the pain of the moment while affirming the general value of difficult circumstances, and the benefits offered by the passage of time.
She has watched me grieve - standing close by, resisting the urge "try to make it better".
She has witnessed me wounded- biting her own lip in pain.
She's spent time waiting for me to come out of my various funks.
She has lived in confusion when she didn't know what was going on with me or how to relate to me.
She's has shared her friends with me, and taught me how to cook for and entertain crowds of people.
She's taught me how to worry, AND how to push anxiety back down for utility's sake.
She has always welcomed anyone I brought into her home, often feeding and mending the parts of my friends and companions that were hungry or scared. She has encouraged me to mend rifts and not let pride or selfishness get in the way of relationships.
Because of her, I trust God.
Because of her, I believe in love.
Because of her, I am not afraid to ask for help.
Because of her, I know I am not perfect, but I know I can do better.
Because of her, (let's face it) I enjoy food a little too much;
and always feel a little guilty going to bed early.
I have always had a good deal of gratitude and admiration for my mom, but when I had kids of my own, something shifted. As a Nana, my mom cares for these little ones physically and globally. And she supports their parents with gentle humility. One day a short while ago, she took care of 4 babies on a snow day, made us all dinner, and then still had the energy/patience to call me later that night (I had been complaining a little about a frustrating phase JB was going through) to tell me, "These times are hard, hang in there."
I guess I just never expected to still continue to feel this much love and nurturing beyond the womb.
i love you, mom.
Happy Birthday!
Friday, January 15, 2010
Bean
This is a re-post from last year... the time gone by has changed, but not the sentiment.
-------------

Just a shout out to our Bean. We can't believe it will be 5 years this summer since you died. We keep you close every day and try to live up to and honor your zest for life, your love for family, your willingness to jump under a car hood to help a friend.
You would'a loved these kids, Bean. Hope you;re watching them.
I think you are right here with us, the very sparkle in their little eyes.
XXXOOO!!! Happy Birthday, Bean!
-------------

Just a shout out to our Bean. We can't believe it will be 5 years this summer since you died. We keep you close every day and try to live up to and honor your zest for life, your love for family, your willingness to jump under a car hood to help a friend.
You would'a loved these kids, Bean. Hope you;re watching them.
I think you are right here with us, the very sparkle in their little eyes.
XXXOOO!!! Happy Birthday, Bean!
Labels:
Anniversaries,
by TWT,
Cars/ driving,
Death,
Family,
Family History
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Holy worst-night-of-sleep EVER, Batman
It was a sinus-y, drippy, achy, restless, "my-son-is-having-surgery tomorrow, so I'm not going to properly medicate myself" attempt at slumber; punctuated by ML's Q2hour "please pop my binki back in" whimper, and JB's Q3hour "I'm coughing, I need water, WHAT DOES IT MEAN I'M GOING TO THE HOSPITAL?!?" restlessness.
1/2 way through the 5 hours I allotted myself to lay down, I remembered some ? urban legend about Vick's Vapor rub as a conductor of electricity that may cause fire if an EKG machine or defibrillator is used on someone that has used Vick's Vapor rub... What is that? Is that from ER in the 90s? Did I make this up? GSO readers, please respond!
My alarm was set for 4:18, but at 3:50am, I just couldn't take it anymore.
I've popped the Tylenol sinus, am going to have some tea, a light breakfast before the boy (who is not supposed to eat anything) wakes up. Then I'll check on the laundry, the (sort of) packed bag, Katy, and then wake JB so we both can have a hot, hot shower together to loosen up the mucus.
He's going in for ear tubes, tonsillectomy, and adnoidectomy. We expect to be there about 26 or 28 hours and then back home. There's a one week moratorium on school, and a 2 week moratorium on "physical activity"... That should be fun with a 2.33 year old :)
We've been telling them all week that he is sick with a cough and a drippy, messy thing. They haven't seemed too worried. This attention to keeping his providers informed has led him to 2 pediatrician visits in 5 days. I guess there's a chance they will look at him, hear his lungs, and/or decide that they can't do the surgery, but hopefully we can get this over with.
AS FOR ME, if anyone asks, IT'S ALLERGIES!!! IT's ALLERGIES, and if it looks worse than that, I'VE BEEN CRYING- A LOT!!! I know they don't want anyone even the least bit sick at this hospital. But I promise to be all Sudefeded up and never cough except into an article of my clothing and stay hidden in his room... I just couldn't not be there. I think I would ache and cramp and pace to DEATH if I couldn't be there.
1/2 way through the 5 hours I allotted myself to lay down, I remembered some ? urban legend about Vick's Vapor rub as a conductor of electricity that may cause fire if an EKG machine or defibrillator is used on someone that has used Vick's Vapor rub... What is that? Is that from ER in the 90s? Did I make this up? GSO readers, please respond!
My alarm was set for 4:18, but at 3:50am, I just couldn't take it anymore.
I've popped the Tylenol sinus, am going to have some tea, a light breakfast before the boy (who is not supposed to eat anything) wakes up. Then I'll check on the laundry, the (sort of) packed bag, Katy, and then wake JB so we both can have a hot, hot shower together to loosen up the mucus.
He's going in for ear tubes, tonsillectomy, and adnoidectomy. We expect to be there about 26 or 28 hours and then back home. There's a one week moratorium on school, and a 2 week moratorium on "physical activity"... That should be fun with a 2.33 year old :)
We've been telling them all week that he is sick with a cough and a drippy, messy thing. They haven't seemed too worried. This attention to keeping his providers informed has led him to 2 pediatrician visits in 5 days. I guess there's a chance they will look at him, hear his lungs, and/or decide that they can't do the surgery, but hopefully we can get this over with.
AS FOR ME, if anyone asks, IT'S ALLERGIES!!! IT's ALLERGIES, and if it looks worse than that, I'VE BEEN CRYING- A LOT!!! I know they don't want anyone even the least bit sick at this hospital. But I promise to be all Sudefeded up and never cough except into an article of my clothing and stay hidden in his room... I just couldn't not be there. I think I would ache and cramp and pace to DEATH if I couldn't be there.
Labels:
AFGO,
by TWT,
Exhaustion,
Family History,
Hospitals,
Illness,
JB,
Life of Mommies,
Sleep patterns
Sunday, January 03, 2010
Back to children's hospital next week
JB told us tonight that his "ear hurts". In the history of all his ear infections, he's never told us that. Either b/c he didn't have the language, or b/c the fluid didn't cause him all that much discomfort. He's never tugged on his ears, he's never moved his head with any indication that he was having ear pain, even when he was little...
That one time his eardrum ruptured, he did scream all night, but he was a baby and we were new parents... we didn't know what the hell was going on.
Now he's got the words, and it was just a little sadder to hear the complaint directly from his little mouth. But actually, we've been waiting for this...
Last week (or maybe 2 weeks ago) he went for his ENT follow up visit (every six months since his ear tube placement surgery last December) and his hearing is back to being significantly affected due to fluid behind his ear drums. Also, his tonsils are big and the ENT told Kt that our boy needed to get the ear tubes replaced and also that he should get his tonsils and adenoids removed.
This is an overnight stay and we were initially torn (having a little PTSD about ML's illness and returning to the sight of our 7 day "vacation of terror" this past October) as time passes, we both can't help but get excited for JB who doesn't even know that he is sick and the reason he is drippy, whinny, coughing, snoring, etc is b/c he needs surgery. We're "excited" (though stressed) because we both believe that he will be a new little boy without all this fluid and pressure in his ears and if he can breathe better and therefore feel more rested on a regular basis...
The surgery is a week from Tuesday. Tonight, we gave him Tylenol which is sucked down like a man dying of thirst in the desert. Thursday is his pre-op physical. If he's still complaining tomorrow, we'll be forced to call the pediatrician and/or the surgeon and see if they want/need us to do anything sooner than next week.
That one time his eardrum ruptured, he did scream all night, but he was a baby and we were new parents... we didn't know what the hell was going on.
Now he's got the words, and it was just a little sadder to hear the complaint directly from his little mouth. But actually, we've been waiting for this...
Last week (or maybe 2 weeks ago) he went for his ENT follow up visit (every six months since his ear tube placement surgery last December) and his hearing is back to being significantly affected due to fluid behind his ear drums. Also, his tonsils are big and the ENT told Kt that our boy needed to get the ear tubes replaced and also that he should get his tonsils and adenoids removed.
This is an overnight stay and we were initially torn (having a little PTSD about ML's illness and returning to the sight of our 7 day "vacation of terror" this past October) as time passes, we both can't help but get excited for JB who doesn't even know that he is sick and the reason he is drippy, whinny, coughing, snoring, etc is b/c he needs surgery. We're "excited" (though stressed) because we both believe that he will be a new little boy without all this fluid and pressure in his ears and if he can breathe better and therefore feel more rested on a regular basis...
The surgery is a week from Tuesday. Tonight, we gave him Tylenol which is sucked down like a man dying of thirst in the desert. Thursday is his pre-op physical. If he's still complaining tomorrow, we'll be forced to call the pediatrician and/or the surgeon and see if they want/need us to do anything sooner than next week.
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